epilogue

epílogo, n.

Pronunciación /ˈɛpɪlɒɡ//ˈɛpəˌlɑɡ//ˈɛpəˌlɔɡ/

nombre

I always had an epilogue to the book, but originally it was my own epilogue.

I just have the epilogue to write and then the story will have officially have come to an end.

There then was the widely-photographed epilogue to that story.

It's an awkward epilogue to an otherwise agreeable piece of fluff.

The epilogue to the film is surprisingly contemporary.

In a way, it seemed like I was writing the epilogue to my life.

Well, I've got seven more chapters and an epilogue to write.

Be sure to stick around for the epilogue to this episode.

This novel consists of three primary sections that are framed by a prologue and an epilogue.

It serves as the epilogue to one of the theologically most profound writings of the New Testament.

I'm not sure how I feel about this chapter, but that's probably because there's only one more chapter and an epilogue to write.

The book consists of fifty-eight poems in five sections with an epilogue.

I've also written an epilogue to this story… but I'll put that up later.

Everything else is prologue and epilogue to that night.

He extolled Shakespeare in many of the prologues and epilogues he wrote for new productions and new theatres, and his ‘Ode to Shakespeare’ proved the most enduring feature of his 1769 Stratford Jubilee and its subsequent London staging.

Goethe employs the fiction that an editor-figure publishes, with an epilogue, the authentic letters of a young man who commits suicide.

That's taken me a week, and there are nine chapters and an epilogue to go.

Just one chapter (after this) and an epilogue to go!

He leaves the house with the curse of his father, but in the epilogue to the play, his family accepts his decision.